Just ask the two men who ran for a seat on the County Board in DeWitt County, Illinois. With the results coming to a tie, both men (reluctantly) agreed to abide by the flip of a coin for the final ruling, according to CNN affiliate WMBD.- Follow the Ticker on Twitter: @PoliticalTicker

The county waited for 14 days after the election and counted every single ballot, including absentees. Nonetheless, the contest was still tied at 827 votes each.

So, with no specific rules from the county on how to settle a tie, officials decided a coin toss would do the trick.

Monday afternoon, DeWitt County Clerk and Recorder Dana Smith dug into her wallet and flipped a quarter in the air with the two candidates present. Incumbent Terry Ferguson called tails, but George Washington's head landed face up, meaning the incumbent representative had been ousted.

"Well I'm a little disappointed, but I guess that's the way the old quarter gets flipped," Ferguson said.

And even though he won, George Wissmiller was upset with the idea, saying the process was like "gambling."

"This is such a departure from anything even approaching a democratic election process and I'm simply not willing to do it," he said, reading a statement from a piece of paper. He also vowed not to take a paycheck for his seat.